Isla Pasion is a private island off the northern tip of Cozumel offering all-inclusive beach day excursions with calm turquoise water, open bars, beach activities, and full meals. This guide covers everything you need to know for 2026 — how to get there, what is included, who it is best for, and how to book.
Isla Pasion Cozumel: The Complete 2026 Guide to Mexico's Private Caribbean Island Day
If you are planning a Cozumel port day and looking for a true Caribbean beach experience without the crowds of the cruise port beach clubs, Isla Pasion belongs at the top of your shortlist. Tucked just off the northern tip of Cozumel, this small private island offers something few destinations in Mexico still deliver: an all-inclusive beach day on calm turquoise water, with open bars, full meals, beach activities, and a sense of genuine seclusion — all bookable as a half-day cruise excursion.
This guide covers everything you need to know about Isla Pasion in 2026: where it is, how to get there, what is actually included, what the day looks like hour by hour, who the experience is best suited for, the most common questions visitors ask, and how to book the excursion as part of a Cozumel cruise port day. For a curated comparison of Isla Pasion against other top Cozumel beach options, you can also browse the full lineup of Cozumel tours and excursions.
Where Is Isla Pasion?
Isla Pasion (sometimes written as "Passion Island" in English) is a small uninhabited island located off the northwestern tip of Cozumel, about a 45-minute drive north from the cruise port followed by a short boat transfer across a shallow turquoise channel. The island sits in the lee of Cozumel, which means the water on the protected side is calm year-round — the visual character is the kind of glassy, light-blue Caribbean that shows up on postcards.
The island itself is small. You can walk its length in about 20 minutes. The development is intentionally minimal: a beach club zone with palapa shade, lounge areas, a buffet pavilion, multiple bars, restrooms, and changing facilities. The rest of the island is preserved sand, palm trees, and quiet shore. There are no hotels. There is no town. You are not sharing the island with overnight guests. The result is a beach day that feels remarkably uncrowded even at peak cruise season.
How to Get to Isla Pasion From the Cozumel Cruise Port
The standard route from any of the three Cozumel cruise terminals — Punta Langosta, Puerta Maya, or the International Pier — looks like this:
- Meet your transportation at the pier. Air-conditioned vans pick up groups at a designated point near your cruise terminal.
- Drive north across the island. The route runs through downtown San Miguel and then north along the developed western coast, eventually reaching the northern tip.
- Board the boat shuttle. A short, calm-water boat ride takes you to Isla Pasion in about 5 to 10 minutes.
- Arrive at the beach club. From the moment you set foot on the island, the all-inclusive day begins.
Total transit time is approximately 60 to 75 minutes each way, depending on traffic. Most cruise excursions to Isla Pasion run roughly 5 to 6 hours total, with 3.5 to 4 hours of actual beach time on the island.
For first-time Cozumel visitors, our first-time visitor guide to Cozumel covers what to expect from the port arrival process and how to plan your first port day with minimal stress.
What Is Included in an All-Inclusive Isla Pasion Day
The reason Isla Pasion has become one of Cozumel's most popular excursions is the simplicity of the all-inclusive package. For a single per-person price, the day typically includes:
Food. A buffet of fresh Mexican and international dishes — grilled fish, ceviche, tacos, fajitas, salads, fruit, rice, beans, and rotating chef specials. Vegetarian, gluten-free, and lighter options are available. Lunch is served midday with snacks available throughout.
Bars and beverages. Open-bar service for the duration of the visit, including domestic and imported beer, margaritas, daiquiris, piña coladas, mixed drinks, wine, soft drinks, bottled water, and coffee.
Beach amenities. Lounge chairs, palapa shade, beach umbrellas, beach towels, restrooms, freshwater showers, and changing rooms.
Non-motorized water activities. Kayaks, paddleboards, snorkel gear, and access to designated swim areas. The shallow protected water is ideal for beginners and for families with kids.
Live music and entertainment. Most operating days include a live band playing during the lunch window and into the afternoon.
Transportation. Round-trip transfer from the cruise terminal, including the air-conditioned van and boat shuttle.
Guide support. A bilingual host coordinates the group throughout the day and handles questions, special requests, and the return logistics.
Optional add-ons typically include massages, jet ski rentals, banana boat rides, and parasailing — all available at the beach club at additional cost. None are required. The base all-inclusive package is genuinely complete on its own.
What the Day Actually Looks Like
A typical Isla Pasion day from a cruise ship rolls out like this:
Hour 0: Departure from the pier. Meet your transportation, ride north across Cozumel. Take in the views of the channel between Cozumel and the mainland Yucatan as the road approaches the northern tip.
Hour 1: Boat transfer to the island. A short, smooth crossing on flat-calm water. By the time you step onto the beach, the cruise port already feels far away.
Hours 1–2: Settling in. Claim a lounge chair, change into swim gear, get your first drink, and start exploring. The water here is shallow and warm — many visitors immediately wade out to find one of the floating beach platforms.
Hours 2–3: Lunch. The buffet opens. Most groups take a long lunch followed by a relaxed return to the water. The pace of the day is deliberately unhurried.
Hours 3–4.5: Beach time. Snorkel, paddleboard, sunbathe, walk the length of the island, or simply nap in a hammock. This is the core of the experience.
Hour 5: Return. Boat back to the mainland, van back to the cruise port, comfortably ahead of the ship's all-aboard time.
The whole rhythm is built around one simple goal: a real beach day, not a checklist of activities.
Who Isla Pasion Is Best For
Isla Pasion suits some types of cruise passengers better than others. Here is an honest breakdown.
Best for:
- Families with kids. The shallow, calm, no-current water is the safest swimming environment on the Cozumel side. Kids can wade out 100 feet and still touch bottom.
- Cruise passengers who want a beach day, not an excursion. If you want to read, swim, eat well, and not be on a schedule, this is the right pick.
- Couples wanting a low-key day. The setting is genuinely beautiful and unhurried.
- First-time Cozumel visitors. The all-inclusive structure removes decision fatigue.
- Groups with mixed activity preferences. Some can snorkel, some can paddleboard, some can sit at the bar — and everyone is happy.
Less ideal for:
- Hardcore snorkelers and divers. The Isla Pasion snorkeling is fine but not Cozumel's best. If reef snorkeling is your priority, an El Cielo or reef-focused snorkel tour is a better fit.
- Adventure-seekers. If you want ATVs, jeeps, ziplines, or cenote diving, Isla Pasion is not the right day.
- Cultural travelers. Mayan ruins, downtown San Miguel, and culinary tours are different experiences entirely.
- Travelers on extreme budgets. Isla Pasion is mid-priced — not the cheapest excursion option, but excellent value for what is included.
If you are not sure which excursion type fits your group, our Cozumel tour comparison tool lets you stack Isla Pasion against other top picks side by side.
Common Questions About Isla Pasion
Is Isla Pasion the same as Passion Island?
Yes. "Isla Pasion" is the Spanish name, "Passion Island" is the direct English translation. They refer to the same destination.
Is Isla Pasion crowded?
Significantly less than the main Cozumel beach clubs. Because access is controlled and the island is small, attendance is capped. Even on busy cruise days, the beach feels relaxed rather than packed.
Is the water calm enough for kids?
Yes. The protected side of the island sees almost no waves, and the shallow shelf extends well offshore. This is one of the calmest swimming environments in the Mexican Caribbean.
Can I do Isla Pasion if I do not drink alcohol?
Absolutely. The open bar includes a full lineup of non-alcoholic options — fresh fruit smoothies, sodas, bottled water, juices, coffee, and virgin cocktails. The drink program is built around the bar, not the alcohol.
Is the food actually good?
Yes. The buffet is more upscale than the typical "beach club buffet" experience — fresh grilled fish, made-to-order tacos, ceviche, and rotating Mexican specialties. Vegetarian and gluten-free diners are well accommodated.
Will I make it back to my ship on time?
The standard excursion is built with a substantial cushion. You will return well before the ship's all-aboard time. Booking with a reputable operator that offers a written cruise return guarantee adds an extra layer of certainty.
What should I bring?
A swimsuit, reef-safe sunscreen, sunglasses, a hat, water shoes (optional but useful), a quick-dry towel (one is provided too), and a small amount of cash for tips and optional add-ons. A waterproof phone pouch is genuinely useful for capturing the water photos.
Is Isla Pasion safe?
Yes. Operations on the island are licensed and regulated, lifeguards are present in swim areas, the boat transfers are short and on calm protected water, and the operator standards for cruise excursions are well established.
Best Time of Year for Isla Pasion
Cozumel's Caribbean climate makes Isla Pasion enjoyable year-round, but a few seasonal notes are worth knowing.
December through April: Peak season. Calm water, low humidity, comfortable temperatures in the high 70s to mid 80s. The most reliable weather window. Book ahead.
May through June: Beautiful early summer with warm water and longer days. Excellent value before peak summer crowds.
July through September: Hot and humid. The water is bath-warm. Brief afternoon showers are common but rarely disrupt a beach day.
October and November: Late hurricane season. Most days are perfect, but check the weather window before your cruise.
Cozumel's geography — protected by the Yucatan and Cuba — means it experiences fewer disruptive weather events than mainland Caribbean coasts, but tropical conditions still apply.
How to Book Isla Pasion as a Cruise Excursion
You can book Isla Pasion either through your cruise line or through an independent licensed operator. Independent booking typically saves money and offers more flexibility on group size, transportation, and add-ons.
When comparing operators, look for:
- A clearly stated cruise return guarantee in writing.
- Liability insurance and operator licensing for cruise passenger pickup.
- Transparent pricing that explicitly lists what is included.
- Verified guest reviews from cruise passengers, not just walk-in tourists.
- Bilingual guides and a real customer service line.
Our Cozumel cruise port guide walks through pier-by-pier logistics so you can match your booking to your terminal of arrival.
The Bottom Line on Isla Pasion
Isla Pasion is one of Cozumel's signature cruise excursions for a reason. It delivers the kind of Caribbean beach day people imagine when they book a cruise — calm turquoise water, real food, an open bar, hammocks, and time to actually relax — packaged into a half-day window that fits comfortably inside a port stop. It is family-friendly, accessible to non-swimmers, popular with couples, and forgiving for travelers who do not want a complicated itinerary.
If you want adventure, drive ATVs through the jungle or scuba dive the reef. If you want a beach day done well, Isla Pasion is hard to beat.
Plan your day, book with a reputable operator, bring sunscreen, and let the island do the rest.





